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Magnolia bark kills oral bacteria

So you’ve tried good oral hygiene, mints, mouthwashes, and sweet-smelling gum. Nothing’s worked, and you wonder what else you can do to sweeten a patient’s bad breath. How about magnolia bark? That’s the surprising proposition from researchers at the Wrigley Company. In the November 14 issue of the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, they report that this traditional Chinese medicine can massacre the bacteria behind halitosis. In fact, compounds

Dental insurance goes global

Sun, sand, and a root canal! Not a natural combination, we know, but that’s exactly what all Blue Cross Blue Shield of South Carolina and BlueChoice HealthPlan of South Carolina members can get, now that they have access to dental services overseas through Companion Global Dental. If other insurers follow suit, it could encourage more Americans to leave the country to get their teeth fixed. Companion Global Healthcare was already

Researchers pick best slenderizing tools

Charged with protecting teeth, dentists loath to grind them away. But that’s exactly what they must do sometimes to fix the alignment of an overcrowded mouth or simply even out asymmetrical tooth widths. Grinding may pose a risk to the teeth because it reduces the amount of enamel, theoretically increasing the risk of cavities and periodontal disease. And rough surfaces left by grinding are a fertile field for plaque. The

CAD/CAM dentistry booming

America’s craze for the perfect set of teeth will make CAD/CAM-produced all-ceramic restorations a $1 billion industry by 2012, according to Millennium Research Group’s “U.S. Markets for Crown & Bridges 2008” report. Dental labs are shifting to these systems as more and more people show a preference for the natural results of all-ceramic restorations combined with the quick,customized turnaround of CAD/CAM systems. This shift will expand the dental CAD/CAM market

Compounded painkillers called risky

A quick dab, no needle and no pain. That’s the appeal of topical anesthetics. But dentists must beware of those in which the ingredients are combined by pharmacies, according to a report in the October issue of the Journal of the American Dental Association (JADA); these poorly regulated products have already killed two patients. The practice of compounding — in which pharmacies combine drugs to form new products — is

Is your culture giving you oral cancer?

Cultural habits, such as smoking, and chewing tobacco or areca nuts, may put different ethnic groups at a higher risk for developing invasive squamous cell carcinoma according to an epidemiologic study of oral cancer in ethnic subpopulations in California. Conducted by researchers at USC’s School of Dentistry, and Keck School of Medicine, the study found that African-American and Caucasian men who had the highest rates of smoking also had the

Beyond dental therapists?

The U.S. surgeon general put dentistry on notice in 2001 with a critical report that laid bare the dismal state of dental health care for the poor. Now three groups, the American Dental Association (ADA), the American Dental Hygienists Association, and a consortium of Alaskan Natives, have finally taken up the challenge. Each is proposing a new breed of professional that’s less than a dentist, but may be more than

Insurers change exam schedule

“See you in six months!” That standard farewell, heard every day in most American dental offices, is starting to fade. Swayed by the research, a growing number of dental insurance plans are rejecting the traditional semiannual cleaning. Instead, these plans are pushing dentists to see healthier patients less often and less healthy patients more often. Starting next year, “some members … will be eligible for up to four periodontal maintenance

The 411 on kids’ health

Wondering how to better serve your younger patients? One step in the right direction is getting hard facts about the overall health of this unique population. “Given the complexity of issues surrounding children’s health, it’s vital that related decisions be based on data that are reliable, current, and local,” said David Alexander, M.D., president and CEO of the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s Health, in a press release. Dr. Alexander

Are the new power brushes better?

Americans love gadgets, so it’s no surprise that power toothbrushes are gaining in popularity here. But this year, as the leading manufacturers roll out new models, two questions linger: Is power really better than manual? And do the new power brushes beat the old ones? The answer to the first question, according to some of the world’s leading experts, is (an extremely qualified) yes. “I think the power brushes are

Lose a tooth, lose a month?

Every time you lose a tooth, your life gets shorter. That’s the conclusion researchers at Göteborg University, in Göteborg, Sweden reached — at least when it comes to people over 70 — when they compared dental records to mortality rates. “The results showed that each remaining tooth at age 70 decreased the mortality risk by 4 percent over 7 years, and 2 percent – 3 percent over 18 years,” wrote

Scandals hit UCLA dental school

The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) dental school faces twin allegations this week: That students cheated on national board exams and that applicants to the university’s orthodontics residencies are being asked for donations in return for admission. The accusations against the orthodontics program stem from an investigation by the Daily Bruin, the UCLA student newspaper. It reported Tuesday that admissions officials were asking applicants for hefty donations, a practice

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